Terpiłowscy


A copy of Bernard Terpiłowski's nobility certificate from 1901 own coat of arms - Terpiłowski

Terpiłowski - a Polish nobleman of Tatar descent, sealing himself with his own coat of arms, depicting the silver ax in the purple field, over which the gate also looks, and in the jewel - the silver hawk. According to the family legend, the Terpiłowskis are to come from one of the runaway Tatar commanders - many of whom went to Christianity, becoming in the ranks of Polish knights - gifted for services by King Casimir the Great in Podolia. With time, Terpiłowski extended the area of ​​their displacement to Volhynia and Polesie. They also began to perform Old Polish offices, and one of them - Samuel Skrobot Terpiłowski - was to be even a Cracow castellan.

In 1564, representatives of one of the Terpiłowskis' branches, nicknamed Kantemir, received special lands from Jerzy Ilinicz for special merits. From that time, their ancestral seat was the village of Terpiłowicze (formerly Kniaziorod and now Zieleniec) in the parish of Czarnawczyce, the Brest-Lithuanian province.

After the partitions of the Republic of Poland, Terpiłowski distinguished itself from the old Polish nobility in the Russian partition. In 1805, he proved his noble origin before the Grodno Deportation Deputy Antoni Kantemir Terpiłowski, son of Ludwik Terpiłowski - a Trotsky's worshiper in 1766. Subsequent confirmations took place in 1839, 1841 and 1901 in front of the Department of Governing Governments of the Senate in St. Petersburg.

The descendant of the family Jerzy Terpiłowski wrote, among others under the pseudonym Jan Kantemir. Members of the family

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